Friends of the Tamar Valley

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Programme for 2017 We meet at the Tamar Valley Centre, Cemetery Road, Drakewalls, and we hope to see lots of members attending. Unless otherwise stated, indoor meetings are on the first Friday of the month and start at 7:30 pm. Non-members are welcome at meetings, although a small charge is levied. We hope the events will prove popular and we look forward to welcoming you to as many as possible. Please contact Jane Kiely (01822 834964; janekielyintamarvalley@uwclub.net) or any other Committee member (see page 3 for contact details) if you have any queries about the programme. Date Speaker and/or Event 7 April 7:00 pm Annual General Meeting followed by Jo Totterdell Local Daffodils: A Market Gardening Perspective 5 May Andrew Thompson The Dukes of Bedford and their Relationship to Tavistock Friday 9 June 6:30 pm Guided walk around the Old Cotehele Deer Park with Stephen Docksey (see page 6) Sunday 25 June 2:00 pm Guided walk along Tavistock Canal with Simon Dell (see page 7) Wednesday 19 July 1:30 pm Guided tour of Pentillie Castle Garden with refreshments on the terrace (weather permitting) afterwards (see page 9) Friends of the Tamar Valley Monday 7 August Guided tour of Crownhill Fort with the Tamar History 11:00 am Group (see page 11) 1 September Graham Wilson A Load of Codswallop Calstock Village Bring along any old bottles you have found and find out Hall what Codswallop really is! 6 October Helen Wilson Excursions in the Tamar Valley: Postcards Home 3 November Chris Painter Rome: Myths, Monsters or just Magnificent! The Friends Newsletter is edited by Anthony Lewis and Helen Wilson. If you would like to write anything for the next edition please contact Anthony or any member of the Committee (see page 3 for contact details). 12 Newsletter Spring 2017

Chairman s Report Spring 2017 It always seems to be a rush to get the programme completed and a lot of it is so far ahead and yet, as you know from recent talks, things can go very wrong! However, I hope you have enjoyed the talks we have arranged and that there is something of interest in the programme. Spring is now starting in the Tamar Valley with a few daffodils and primroses coming out and it will soon come into its own do have a walk through the Danescombe Valley if you have a chance. It really is special and we are very lucky to live in such a lovely area. The AGM is in April and it would be great to have some new faces on the committee. We are only seven people and it would spread the load if we could have a bit more help, but I think we are lucky to have the people we have as everything gets done. We look forward to seeing you at the meetings and events and hope there is something of interest for everyone. Jane Kiely, Chairman February 2017 Reports of Meetings and Events We include reports of our monthly meetings and visits up to and including February 2017. Helen Wilson A Tour of the Tamar Valley through Early Postcards (9 September 2016) by Anthony Lewis There was a packed house for this talk, which centred on early postcards of the Tamar Valley and the insights that they provide into its history. Helen began with a view from Maker with Plymouth in the background and the tall chimneys of Southdown brickworks on the Cornwall side. An 1898 view further west from the same spot featured Millbrook Lake, the Foss Quay brickworks and the mill pond. A postcard from 1908 of Admiral s Hard in Stonehouse, Plymouth, showed the ferry coming in from Cremyll and across the water passenger coaches on the railway line on Richmond Walk. A postcard of Cremyll featured the Italiante tower of Tower Cottage damaged in April 1941 and not rebuilt. There are numerous early postcards of the Torpoint Ferry and Helen chose two to illustrate the type in use before 1925, with the engine house in the centre, and the one brought in after Cornwall County Council took over, in which the engine was located on one side. Front cover: Two postcards of 'The Windings' produced by Valentine (first published 1889) in which paddle steamers have been added to appeal to day trippers. Both are heading dangerously for the shore. 2 in other West Country churches. Quite why there is a concentration in Devon is not known. Some bosses are painted and gilded but this is almost always modern adornment. However, there is evidence that the bosses would originally have been highly coloured. Devon was the start of a long exploration of the origin of the motif for Sue and her co-researchers, Tom Greeves and Chris Chapman. They began by debunking the myth that the symbol represented the tinners rabbits and went on to trace the use of the Three Hares motif back to sixth-century Buddhist cave temples on the edge of the Gobi desert in China. From there it probably travelled along the silk road through Asia, the Middle East and Europe, where they found many examples. Consequently, the symbol was adopted in the worlds of Islam, Judaism and Christianity. In the Islamic world it is only used in secular settings, but elsewhere it is generally found in a religious context. The talk was illustrated with numerous illustrations from the recently published book The Three Hares: A Curiosity Worth Regarding. The Three Hares boss at Cotehele Sue Andrew Crownhill Fort Monday 7 August 2017 at 11:00 am We will meet for a private tour of the Fort (about 2 hours) which will include parts that are not offered on the public tours, with time afterwards to have a wander around unaccompanied. We have arranged for a pop up café to be provided for refreshments. This is a joint visit with the Tamar History Group. The maximum is 40, with 20 per group. The cost will depend on numbers and would be 5.00 per person for a group of 12. Booking essential. For further information ring Jane on 01822 834964. 11 The Three Hares book Skerryvore Productions

Singing Workshop & Concert The Greatest Hits of Choral Music with The Callington Singers St Mary s Church, Callington, 29 April 2017 The Callington Singers are very pleased to announce that the choir has recently been awarded a grant from Cornwall Council s Community Chest scheme. The aim of this scheme is to support local not for profit community events and programmes. The Callington Singers are keen to support their home town, so we are using the money to fund a singing workshop to raise money for Callington Heritage Museum. The Workshop (from 11:00am to 5:00pm) is designed to be accessible to everybody of any singing ability to come and sing the most well known choral works. If you take part you will also be able to keep the sheet music as a souvenir of the day. Even if you are not a singer, you can still help us to raise money by coming along to the concert which follows the singing day. A volunteer from the Heritage Centre will be giving a short presentation about the work they do followed by a performance by participants of the workshop at 5:30pm to show off what they have learnt. The programme for the day will include some of the greatest pieces of choral music ever written, including works by Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Vaughan Williams, Vivaldi, Fauré and others. For an application form and information pack, please use the contact form on our website (https://callingtonsingers.org/), or telephone 01579 370323. You can also find us on Facebook. Sue Andrew The Three Hares: A Curiosity Worth Regarding (3 February 2017) by Helen Wilson At the February meeting of the Friends, Sue Andrew presented a fascinating talk on the Three Hares motif. This enigmatic image is of three beasts in a circle, each of which has two ears, but between them they have only three, forming a triangle at the centre of the design. In Devon the Three Hares are found on wooden roof bosses in 16 churches, with one example in Cornwall in Cotehele chapel. Nearly always the hares are running in an anti-clockwise direction. Sue showed us images from Cheriton Bishop, Sampford Courtenay, where there are three examples, and Widecombe, as well as many others. They are mainly distributed on Dartmoor with some in north Devon and a few 10 In a postcard of Wilcove next to the estuary, the tidal road could clearly be seen. Around the corner, in the Lynher estuary, a postcard labelled Anthony Woods near Saltash showed Jupiter Point, where a ferry once crossed to Antony Passage. Further up the Lynher lies Forder Creek and several good postcards exist of the quays for the quarry industry in the early C20th, as well as more picturesque views of the village of Forder. Helen presented two cards of the Saltash ferry from 1904 and 1925, and another looking down what was then known as Fore Street Hill, with the Royal Albert Bridge beyond. In a rare card of Cargreen, posted in 1911, it seemed half the village had turned out to be in the photograph. It was taken by local man Thomas Harris of Quethiock, who also took an unusual view of Pentillie Quay with the lodge and school house, a sailing boat tied up at the pier and a gardener at work with his wheelbarrow. Moving over to the Bere Peninsula, Helen showed a beautifully atmospheric shot of the quay at Bere Ferrers, followed by one of Weir Quay and several of Bere Alston s Fore Street and Station Road. It might be imagined that views of Cotehele Quay from the river were fairly common but it seems not. The one Helen managed to find includes a paddle steamer on the river and a sailing barge tied up at the lime kilns. Upstream from there, near Danescombe Valley, lies what was once called the Ashburton Hotel. In a postcard featuring this distinctive house in 1889, all the slopes around were occupied by market gardening. The twists of the river around Danescombe were known as The Windings and there are numerous cards depicting this scene, aimed at the day trippers on the steamers that regularly came up from Plymouth. In some, as Helen demonstrated, paddle steamers were added for extra appeal (see front cover) an early example of photoshopping! A postcard of Calstock taken from across the river at Goss Yard before the viaduct was built in 1907, was postmarked 1915, illustrating that picturesque views of the village were in demand irrespective of reality. Helen showed four different images of James Passage Inn on the Devon side and another of Committee 2017 Chairman Jane Kiely 01822 834964 janekielyintamarvalley@uwclub.net Tamar Editor Clive Charlton 01822 840497 ccharlton@plymouth.ac.uk Hon Secretary Sharyn Hedge 01822 841371 sharyn.hedge@btinternet.com Hon Treasurer Anthony Lewis 01752 671356 calewis@plymouth.ac.uk Membership Secretary Anthony Lewis 01752 671356 calewis@plymouth.ac.uk Programme Secretary Jane Kiely 01822 834964 janekielyintamarvalley@uwclub.net Newsletter Editor Anthony Lewis 01752 671356 calewis@plymouth.ac.uk Committee Members Peter Hunkin 01752 844993 peter.hunkin@mypostoffice.co.uk Cliff Lambert 01822 834964 janekielyintamarvalley@uwclub.net John Chilvers 01752 339637 jandc.chilvers@tiscali.co.uk 3

Postcard (1906) showing the chimneys and circular kiln of the Plymouth Brickworks at North Dimson F. Frith & Co. Ltd Calstock viaduct under construction. A popular location for tourists in the early C19th was the riverside below Morwell Rocks and there are numerous postcards of this area. Weir Head, with its canal and brickworks, was also a popular view for postcards. Before colour photography, producers often tinted or coloured the images but this was not always done correctly. Helen showed one of Weir Head, from a photograph taken in 1889, where parts of the river had been coloured green and the canal was brown, as if it was a path. The sender of an interesting postcard of Dimson from 1906 had kindly pencilled in Brick works next to the building on the skyline that produced fire bricks in the second half of the C19th. Gunnislake Newbridge attracted much attention from postcard producers. Helen s favourite is one taken looking upstream from high on the Cornwall side in 1893, in which the valley is clothed in deciduous trees, rather than the conifers of today. From much further upstream, Helen showed a rather misty image of Horsebridge, posted in 1908, and two of Milton Abbot from 1906 before the Lutyens houses were built. Helen concluded with three very early postcards: two of Endsleigh House and another of Greystone Bridge, all from 1875. There was a great deal of interest in this talk and Helen s promised to produce more images for another in 2017. Clive showing the Friends the Shelley Well in June 2013 Anthony Lewis Frances recorded her 1852 visit to Bere Ferrers to see her son and said it was a good place for him. In her account she recorded the earthquake that occurred in the region and her great interest in visits to Crockerntor, Wistman s Wood, Admiral s Hard and Devonport Dockyard. Frances paid further visits to Bere Ferrers in 1853 and 1854, with another continental tour in between and afterwards. From 1866, however, the diary faded and she retired to the Isle of Wight near Osborne House, where she visited, and was visited by, Queen Victoria. It is said that she died peacefully in 1873 after kissing the hand of the Queen. Despite all this research, Clive was no nearer finding out the full story behind Lady Shelley and the well in Bere Ferrers, but it had been an interesting and illuminating journey. Pentillie Castle Garden Wednesday 19 July 2017 1:30 pm Join us for a guided walk around the gardens at Pentillie followed by refreshments on the terrace, with the wonderful view over the oxbow of the Tamar. Cost 16.50 per person and booking is essential. For further information ring Jane on 01822 834964. 4 9

producing the largest explosion to date, heard in London and Dublin. Although the Germans retook the Ridge in spring 1918, they were finally driven back that autumn. The role of the tunnellers in this success had been highly significant, yet only one was awarded the VC during the four years of the war. Griffiths was awarded the DSO in 1916 and knighted in 1917, changing his name to Norton-Griffiths in the same year. Clive Charlton Lady Shelley: Close Confidante of the Duke of Wellington, Enthusiastic European Traveller, and Visitor and Benefactor to Bere Ferrers (6 January 2017) by Helen Wilson Lady Shelley lived a long and remarkable life, associating with many politicians and aristocrats, including the Edgcumbes. Yet in the 1850s she visited Bere Ferrers and left a legacy that remains to this day. Near the War Memorial in Bere Ferrers is the Shelley Well. A plaque states This well was made by Frances Lady Shelley for the benefit of the poor in her son s parish 1852. Clive set out to discover the story behind the well and Lady Shelley s visits. Fortunately, Lady Shelley wrote a diary that was edited and published in two volumes in 1912 by her grandson Richard Edgcumbe, father of Kenelm the 6th Earl. It is essentially a travelogue, although no mention is made of her children and very little of her husband. She was born Frances Winckley in 1787 in Preston, Lancashire. After her father s early death and her mother s remarriage and demise, she was married off by family friends to Sir John Shelley, 6th Baronet, in 1807. He was a rake and gambler, who adored hunting, port and cricket. Nevertheless, the marriage produced five children. The diaries project an image of a woman who was a charming, sociable, chaste flirt, social climber and snob, yet with a passionate interest in history, politics and science an able woman in a male-dominated world. Through her marriage she entered the top tier of society, including the sphere of the Prince Regent, the future George IV. Through this social milieu, she became a close friend and confidante of Wellington. Following his triumph at Talavera in 1815, Frances travelled to Calais and then Paris to be in the excitement of the victory, attending balls and parties and riding with Wellington in the military parade. She noted in her diary that she felt she may lose her head. Her diaries go on to provide detailed accounts of several grand tours on which she met top people, but her devotion to Wellington continued with copious correspondence. It was on the trip to Paris in 1815 that Frances met Lady Emma Edgcumbe, a connection that led to the engagement of her daughter Fanny to George Edgcumbe in 1834. When Frances son Frederick, a cleric, was in need of a parish, arrangements were made for him to become Rector of Bere Ferrers, where he appears in the 1851 census with his wife and three children. 8 Rupert Kirkwood Kayaking the South West Coast Path (7 October 2016) by Clive Charlton For our October meeting, Rupert Kirkwood gave us a wonderfully entertaining and fascinating account of his intrepid water-borne adventures. Rupert has spent his professional career on land, as a vet but his great passion is to be afloat on his sleek and sturdy sea kayak. As often as he can, he heads for the coast, taking his camera with him. He has undertaken a remarkable complete circumnavigation of the coast of the South West Peninsula. For Rupert, coast means not just along the beaches and cliffs of the sea s face, but also up the many estuaries and obscure creeks, including those on the Tamar system. And his adventures are far from simply clocking up the nautical miles, for Rupert uses his kayak to get close to, and photograph, the wonderful array of wildlife and landscapes he encounters. Rupert combined a wonderful, infectious enthusiasm and awe for his subject with an authoritative understanding of nature and the sea. His accessible talk was enriched by a superb series of photographs, some of them unique, as well as beautiful to look at. We got a real sense of his exciting encounter with a huge fin whale off the Eddystone reef, as well as basking sharks, dolphins, seals, puffins and Manx shearwaters elsewhere around the coast. Morwellham Quay from the River Rupert Kirkwood 5

But as a contrast to braving the challenging waves and tides at sea, Rupert has also crept his way up the quieter reaches of the South West s estuaries. Here, he has captured tranquil water scenes and inland wildlife. A particularly unusual shot was that of a badger swimming in a creek off the Fal estuary. We also saw fine images of the Tamar and Tavy. Rupert kindly let us use one of these of Calstock Viaduct for the cover of the 2016 edition of our Tamar journal. Altogether, Rupert s presentation was really worthwhile, fascinating and informative. For more on Rupert s adventures, see his website at: https:// kayakfishinguk.wordpress.com/. Rick Stewart The Road to Messines: Military Mining and Underground Warfare on the Western Front in WW1 (4 November 2016) by Helen Wilson Well known for his interest in mining, Rick Stewart also has a fascination with WWI, stemming from family holidays in Northern France. The familiar image of that war is of the maze of trenches along the frontline, but Rick became intrigued by the hidden war carried on underground. At the beginning of the war, there were few people who envisaged that hostilities would be prolonged beyond a few months. John Griffiths (later Sir John Norton-Griffiths), a politician with a military and engineering background, thought that preparations should be made for a longer conflict. At the start of the war he had raised the 2nd King Edward s Horse at his own expense and built many fortifications along the Western Front, with himself as Major. By December 1914, after the British Army had suffered tremendous losses at Ypres, and the Germans were detonating mines in underground tunnels under the Allies trenches, Griffiths approached the government with an idea. His engineering company was engaged in tunnelling work for new sewers in Manchester and he envisaged that their skills could be useful for the war effort. The system used for the tunnels was referred to as clay kicking. The digger or mole lay at an angle on a wooden frame with his feet towards the workface. The frame gave the support needed to push the spade into the soil using both feet; the chunk removed being passed behind for disposal. The technique was fast, quiet and suited to clay. Cotehele Deer Park Friday 9 June 2017 at 6:30 pm Park in small car park near Cotehele House and meet by Reception, for a 1½ 2 hour guided walk around the old Deer Park. Optional refreshments at the Who d Have Thought It, St Dominick, afterwards. Cost 2.00 per person to be paid on the day. For further information ring Jane on 01822 834964. 6 Clay Kicking From 'Tunnellers: the story of the Tunnelling Companies' 1936 by W. Grant Grieve and Bernard Newman (http://www.lochnagarcrater.org/militarymining2.html) Griffiths ideas were initially ignored but when British efforts at tunnelling by the small Royal Engineers (RE) force were successful but inadequate, he was approached to explain further. Much of the area held by the British was on similar clay to that of Manchester and the work of his moles could be carried out quickly and silently. Griffiths men were immediately taken off the work in Manchester and sent to the Front to join the 250th Tunnelling Company of the RE. The 251st Tunnelling Company was also formed and recruited mainly from Devon and Cornwall, including two men from Harrowbarrow and another from Calstock. Rick explained in some detail how the tunnels were constructed and used in several operations that eventually ensured the success of the Allies, particularly at the Battle of Messines in June 1917. During this operation 934,000 lbs of explosives were detonated under the Messines Ridge, Tavistock Canal Sunday 25 June 2017 at 2:00 pm As it is the 200th Anniversary of the opening of the Tavistock Canal, we have arranged a guided walk along the canal with Simon Dell. It will take about 2½ hours but the path alongside the canal is level and wide. We should be back by about 4.30 and there is an option of tea in the Bedford Hotel. Cost 2.00 per person to be paid on the day (refreshments not included but booking essential). For further information ring Jane on 01822 834964. 7